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Every Dead Thing.
 
 

Every Dead Thing. (Hardcover)

by John. Connolly (Author) "THE WAITRESS was in her fifties, dressed in a tight black miniskirt, white blouse, and black high heels ..." (more)
3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (105 customer reviews)

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Product Description

From Amazon.com

It's a good idea to avoid reading John Connolly's debut novel on a full stomach. His descriptions of mutilated murder victims give him honorary membership in the gore wars club. Every Dead Thing is a fast-paced piece of fiction from an author whose regular stomping ground is as a journalist for the Irish Times.

NYPD detective Charlie "Bird" Parker was busy boozing at Tom's Oak Tavern when his wife Susan, and young daughter Jennifer were mutilated by a killer called the Traveling Man. Consumed by guilt and alcoholism, Charlie soon lost his job, and almost his sanity. Several months on he is sober and ready to get his life back in order. Charlie takes up private investigating. One of his first cases involves the disappearance of a woman called Catherine Demeter. At first this puzzle seems unrelated to the Traveling Man--but Charlie has a gut feeling that the slayer is pulling the strings. "I dreamed of Catherine Demeter surrounded by darkness and flames and the bones of dead children. And I knew then that some terrible blackness had descended upon her."

The search for Catherine takes Charlie on a whirlwind tour of the South. First to the small Virginian town of Haven, where, some 30 years before, Catherine's sister Amy was murdered, along with other local children. But the trail turns cold--until a tip from a psychic leads Charlie to the swamplands of Louisiana. The subplots of Catherine's disappearance, age-old child murders, and the slaying of the Parker family finally unite in the hot, humid terrain. A showdown with the Traveling Man is inevitable.

Every Dead Thing is classic American crime fiction, and it's hard to believe that John Connolly was born and raised on the Emerald Isle. --Naomi Gesinger



From Publishers Weekly

One serial killer who tortures children and another who steals victims' faces after mutilating their bodies give readers two grisly plots in one darkly ingenious debut novel. New York Homicide cop Charlie "Bird" Parker left the force when his wife and baby daughter were gruesomely murdered (while he was boozing down the block), but he agrees to trace a missing woman as a favor to his old partner. The trail leads from Brooklyn wise guys to a dying rural Virginia town where the shameful secret (children were tortured and killed by wealthy local eccentrics) is linked to the missing woman. Stepping on toes and muscling past stonewallers, Charlie eludes hired killers to flush several villains into the open with the help of two friendly hitmenAa competently lethal gay couple who provide a refreshing change from both stereotypes. Charlie receives a phone call from Tante Marie, a Creole woman near New Orleans whose detailed psychic visions of "The Traveling Man" match the profile of the killer. Scoping out the bayous, Charlie teams up with his old FBI buddy, Woolrich, for more convoluted probing involving a plethora of psychic tips, bodies in the bayou and Creole gangs. A romance with a beautiful Brooklyn profiler who joins the case helps make the New Orleans sequence of the novel sing. The tortuous plot seldom falters and each character is memorable. There are sometimes too many detailsAlike extensive lists of zydeco and Cajun singers on the radioAthat force the Louisiana ambiance, and Brooklyn never does feel right, but the rural Virginia town is petty, bitter perfection: no mean feat for a native Dubliner. The prose rings of '40s L.A. noir, ? la Chandler and Hammett, but the grisly deaths, poetic cops and psychic episodes set this tale apart. Published by Hodder in Great Britain in January, Connolly's gory tale should find an avid U.S. audience. Foreign rights sold in Germany, Japan and Italy.
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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THE WAITRESS was in her fifties, dressed in a tight black miniskirt, white blouse, and black high heels. Read the first page
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Every Dead Thing.
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Every Dead Thing. 3.9 out of 5 stars (105)
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Customer Reviews

105 Reviews
5 star:
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4 star:
 (30)
3 star:
 (20)
2 star:
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1 star:
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Average Customer Review
3.9 out of 5 stars (105 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most helpful customer reviews

 
5.0 out of 5 stars This was the best BOOK!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!, Jun 22 2004
By Susan Cameron (Alabaster, Alabama United States) - See all my reviews
This book will keep you reading. It is one of the best books I have read this year besides The DaVinci Code.
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5.0 out of 5 stars The best author I have read in a long time!, May 25 2004
By A Customer
This is the first book in a series that will keep you up late nights. First of all b/c you won't be able to put it down and secondly, b/c John Connolly writes in such vivid detail - you will have the creeps! I have read the whole series now and the latest "Bad Men". Connolly never disappoints.
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3.0 out of 5 stars A very convoluted novel, April 19 2004
By A Customer
There are moments of lyrical terror in this book, but overall I found it to be very hard to follow and to finish. Usually, with a "thriller," I can't stop reading until the tale is finished, but this one, with basically two storylines that relate to one another only in the vaguest of ways, was 'way too complicated. Just as I was in the groove with one storyline, Connolly would pop another, with different characters, except for Bird Parker, a different crime, different clues, etc. etc. It made for tedious reading.

Still, there is lots to like about this book: the air of menace you could cut with a knife, the sharp dialogue, and of the complex character of Charlie Bird Parker.

I will certainly give John Connolly another whirl, but this one fell short for me.

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Most recent customer reviews

3.0 out of 5 stars Cumbersome First Novel
The writing brought this mystery up to three stars. Unfortunately, the book was way too full. There easily could have been two books made of what is packed into this novel... Read more
Published on Feb 12 2004 by Richard A. Mitchell

4.0 out of 5 stars Every Dead Thing---and a lot of things die!
This is one heck of a first novel. Charlie Parker ("Bird" to his friends) is a police detective who's lost his wife and daughter to a particularly horrific serial killer who not... Read more
Published on Jan 15 2004 by David W. Nicholas

3.0 out of 5 stars a whole lot of dead things
Every dead thing is John Connolly's debut novel.
I read his other book's first for some reason and, I liked the other books more. Read more
Published on Dec 30 2003 by T. Corbett

4.0 out of 5 stars dense and solid, if slightly flawed, novel
Connolly's debut novel has some strong writing, with a good attention to detail and description. Yes, like other readers, I found it hard to believe that he hasn't spent his life... Read more
Published on Nov 2 2003 by David Group

4.0 out of 5 stars Creepy
Well. I like the book. It only gets 4 stars for being a bit confusing in places; the jumping about confused me a little. Read more
Published on Feb 11 2003 by A. Trotter

4.0 out of 5 stars Creepy
Well. I like the book. It only gets 4 stars for being a bit confusing in places; the jumping about confused me a little. Read more
Published on Feb 11 2003 by A. Trotter

4.0 out of 5 stars LIKE WATCHING A CAR CRASH
I don't know what to make of this book. Connolly has writing talent. He knows how to pick an interesting subject, research it and integrate his knowledge. Read more
Published on Dec 13 2002 by Martin V Cusack

3.0 out of 5 stars New York to New Orleans: The Death Express
John Connolly is extraordinary. Though an Irishman residing in Dublin, "Every Dead Thing" has an entirely believable cast of American characters set on the eastern seaboard of... Read more
Published on Dec 4 2002 by sweetmolly

5.0 out of 5 stars Bloodbath in the bayou
Every Dead Thing is an incredibly intense accounting of the events surrounding the brutal and ritualistic murders of Susan and Jennifer Parker, wife and daughter of NYPD detective... Read more
Published on Oct 27 2002 by Cory D. Slipman

2.0 out of 5 stars Every Politically Correct Thing...
...should be the title of this book. Won't waste your time telling the story again. Well-written, but painfully predictable and politically correct, complete with gay assassin and... Read more
Published on Oct 5 2002 by barelybreathing

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